Hi Claude, welcome to JRA!
Although I am rather enthusiastic about junkrigs, I also have a seriously soft spot for the Ljungstrøm Rig (LjR) and its inventor, Frederik Ljungstrøm. I once made a little 7.4m2 LjR for a friend’s rowing boat, and I found it to be extraordinarily efficient to windward, as well as being generally easy to deal with. After all, it was just a jib with no mast in the way each time we should tack.
Before I suggest any JR for your boat, I have some armchair ideas for your LjR, partly based on experience with that little rig. With single-handed day-sailing in mind, I would (..if she were mine...)..
1. ..first of all, I would fit some sort of tiller lock, easy to set and release. This would give me free hands for a few seconds to deal with the rig.
2. As with any boom-less jib, it would need genoa tracks to keep the twist right as one falls off or as one rolls in some of the sail. This is out of the question here. A good substitute for this is the fitting of a barber-hauler.
3. I think I would drop the single self-tacking sheet and rather have one to each side, as on a standard genoa. I would even let them pass over a winch on each cockpit coaming. (more below). This lets me have one barber hauler ready on each sheet.
4. Like any jib, this one needs to be poled out on a broad reach and run. I imagine the pole working from a vertical crutch on top of ‘the main hatch which is not there’
5. Fitting an autopilot or windvane selfsteering, would make life easier.
The suggested steps above appears to be steps in the wrong direction, but if correctly organised, I think the rig will be safe and fun to operate, and one will be rewarded with better upwind-performance than with moist other rigs.
Tacking
Before starting the tack, I would cast off the barber hauler, if in use. Then I would put the tiller over for a moderately fast tacking – and lock the tiller. This gives me free hands to cast off the ‘old’ sheet and sheet in the ‘new’ one without needing the winch handle - no mast in the way to slow me down. When established on the new tack, I would take over the tiller and set the active barber hauler, fitted to be in reach of the helmsman.
Broad-reaching and running
To be free to operate the pole, a second crew-member or some automatic steering would make sense. The pole ( a carbon pole as used by window-cleaners?), made with a big, gaping yaw in on end, and an 8mm line in the other, can be safely operated from the cockpit. This will suddenly make the sail efficient and docile, downwind. A light tug on the barber hauler will remove any excessive twist.
A lot more could be said, but I don’t know what the problem is with the roller reefing mechanism, so need to hear more about that.
Cheers,
Arne
PS: If the mast is too weak for the LjR, it will also be too weak with a JR